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Otto Skorzeny: The Devil’s Disciple PDF

437 Pages·2018·13.761 MB·English
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Preview Otto Skorzeny: The Devil’s Disciple

1 2 Contents Prologue Maps 1. The Knowledge of Pain 2. Accidental Soldier 3. Thugs in Field Grey 4. The Liberator of Mussolini 5. Special Ops and High-Value Targets 6. Miracle Weapons 7. The Stauffenberg Plot – July 1944 8. The Scherhorn Affair 9. The SS Changes Tack 10. Operation Panzerfaust: Budapest, October 1944 11. Everything on One Card: Operation Greif 12. Operation Greif: Mission and Aftermath 13. Implosion: The Schwedt Bridgehead 14. Skorzeny’s Last Stand 15. Trial and Errors 16. Escape from Darmstadt 17. Apocalypse Soon: Preparing for World War III 18. Neo-Nazis and Colonel Nasser: Skorzeny’s Wilderness Years 19. The Years of Plenty 3 20. Ghosts of the Past: Skorzeny’s Last Years Epilogue: Man and Myth Glossary Note on the Waffen-SS Bibliography Notes Acknowledgments 4 Prologue 12 September 1943: Gran Sasso, central Italy The Propaganda Kompanie cameraman panned across the white peaks and jagged ridges looming above, and the grassy, rock-strewn slopes. He filmed the exterior of the Hotel Campo Imperatore, and Luftwaffe paratroopers and SS commandos posing and grinning. They were rightly pleased with themselves, and the Propaganda Kompanie men encouraged them to play up for the camera. One blond, boyish paratrooper was singled out for a close-up: ‘Take off your helmet! Look to the sky!’ They had reason to smile. In a daringly planned and well-executed operation, this small team of a hundred men had landed in gliders, seized the mountain-top and the hotel from a large detachment of Italian guards – without firing a shot – and rescued former dictator Benito Mussolini from captivity. If the Führer’s strategy went to plan, this would scupper the rebel Italian government’s peace deal with the Allies. It would also play brilliantly in the next edition of Die Deutsche Wochenschau, the official state newsreel – 1 hence the heavy Propaganda Kompanie presence. Even in flickering monochrome on cinema screens, the mountain setting looked spectacular. The troops resembled supermen. Mussolini, done up tight in a long winter overcoat and dark fedora, walked out of the hotel towards the camera among a crowd of soldiers. They grinned. Il Duce grinned. At his right elbow, guiding him, was a tall, imposing German officer in a pale uniform, moustached, with a long scar disfiguring the left side of his face; he was evidently conscious of the camera’s eye. The clipped voice of the narrator identified him as SS-Hauptsturmführer Skorzeny, commander of the lightning strike which had just liberated ‘Der Duce’. To Skorzeny’s satisfaction, his name was correctly pronounced, a matter to which he attached great importance. Mussolini’s rescue was a gift for the producers of Die Deutsche 2 Wochenschau. As each week passed, their job – which was to depict the Third Reich’s magnificent performance in the war – was getting harder. Allied aircraft were firebombing cities in the heart of the Reich, and German forces were being pushed back on all fronts. Just a few weeks earlier, they had lost 5 the Battle of Kursk, and would never again be able to take the offensive on the Eastern Front. In this same edition of the newsreel, the propagandists continued the increasingly difficult task of conjuring from the relentless, grinding retreat a heroic defence of civilisation against the Communist 3 barbarian horde. Luckily they had other things to counterbalance it – such as Operation Achse (Axis), Germany’s lightning seizure of control in Italy. It had been triggered by the Fascist government deposing Mussolini and plotting to sell him to the Allies in exchange for favourable peace terms. On cinema screens, the taking of Rome by German forces looked like a victory. Against that background, the heroic rescue of Mussolini – throwing a spanner in the traitors’ works – was a propaganda triumph for the Führer. It helped to distract from the fact that the Allies, having taken North Africa and Sicily, had just landed on the Italian mainland at Salerno. The newsreel rolled on. With Skorzeny sticking to Mussolini’s side (and the camera’s lens), the group of officers and men walked to the waiting getaway plane. The aircraft brought in for the task was an ultra-lightweight Fieseler Fi 156 Storch, chosen for its ability to take off from extremely short improvised runways; indeed, it was such an eager flyer that in a good headwind it could hover. At the controls was Luftwaffe Hauptmann Heinrich Gerlach, personal pilot to Generaloberst Kurt Student, commander of the Luftwaffe’s airborne arm, XI. Fliegerkorps, and the man in overall command of this operation. Gerlach had been specially selected for the mission, and after circling overhead for a while had executed a superb landing on a strip of ground only 35 metres long. The little Storch could only take one passenger. This should pose no problem; after all, there was only one important man on that mountain-top. Gerlach would fly Mussolini to Rome while the rest of the German team departed by cable car and truck. SS-Hauptsturmführer Otto Skorzeny didn’t see it that way; in his mind there were two important men who needed to get to Rome, and he was one of them. Was he not the mastermind and leader of the operation? In fact, he was neither, but he had a special role and was determined to make the most of it. In this moment he had the eye of the world on him, and he’d be damned if he would step aside. Skorzeny was more conscious of the cameras on him than any other man on that mountain except for Mussolini. He wanted to be seen personally bringing Mussolini to freedom. German military men had a name for this kind of thirst for glory: Halsschmerzen – ‘sore throat’ – an allusion to the Ritterkreuz (Knight’s Cross), which was worn around the 6 neck. Glory and romance drove Otto Skorzeny – and an acute sense of his own image. On this day, despite being an SS officer, he was wearing the romantic golden tan tropical kit of the Luftwaffe, a service he greatly admired and in which he had once briefly served. Skorzeny informed Gerlach that he was coming aboard. Away from the camera, a brief and angry discussion took place between the two. Given the extremely short take-off strip, having Skorzeny’s weight in the plane was an invitation to disaster. Skorzeny invoked the name of the Führer, who had appointed him Mussolini’s guardian; it was more than his life was worth to let the prize out of his sight. He exhorted and threatened, and soon got his way. Back on screen, Skorzeny smilingly helped a distinctly anxious-looking Duce into his seat and strapped him in. Mussolini, himself an experienced pilot, knew they were courting disaster. The engine started, and Skorzeny squeezed himself into the luggage compartment. Gerlach held the Storch on its brakes and ran the engine up to full power. Surrounded by cheering, waving commandos, the plane lurched forward, bouncing on the uneven ground as it lumbered towards the edge of the precipice. The newsreel cut away an instant before it reached the brink. The men on the ground gasped as the Storch shot over and dropped instantly out of sight, plummeting into the void, taking with it Otto Skorzeny’s hopes of glory and Adolf Hitler’s scheme for a strategic solution in Italy. The engine howled, strained … and after a horrible pause the fragile plane reappeared in the distance, struggling, slowly climbing away, shrinking to a dot as it banked away westward. There could hardly be a more apt symbol of Otto Skorzeny’s life thus far – and to come – than the fall and flight of that little plane. 7 Maps 1. The Gran Sasso Raid, 12 September 1943 2. Projected advance of 6. Panzerarmee, 16–18 December 1944 3. Fölkersam’s assault on the Warche Brück, Malmédy, 21 December 1944 4. The Schwedt Bridgehead, early February 1945 5. The final campaign in Germany, showing extent of the Alpenfestung, April–May 1945 8 THE GRAN SASSO RAID, 12 SEPTEMBER 1943 9 PROJECTED ADVANCE OF 6. PANZERARMEE, 16–18 DECEMBER 1944 10

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